1. TCT CONNECT-269 A First-in-Human Study of the Second-Generation, Thin-Strut, Everolimus-Eluting Bioresorbable Scaffold: Final IVUS and OCT Results From the FAST Clinical Trial.
- Author
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Honda Y., Okada K., Ikutomi M., Hollak M.B., Yock P., Popma J., Seneviratne S., Walters D., Whitbourn R., Stewart J., El-Jack S., Allocco D., Meredith I., Fitzgerald P.J., Nishi T., Kameda R., Honda Y., Okada K., Ikutomi M., Hollak M.B., Yock P., Popma J., Seneviratne S., Walters D., Whitbourn R., Stewart J., El-Jack S., Allocco D., Meredith I., Fitzgerald P.J., Nishi T., and Kameda R.
- Abstract
Background: The FAST Feasibility Study is a first-in-human, prospective, multicenter, single-arm study of the second-generation, thin-strut (105-mum thickness), everolimus-eluting Renuvia bioresorbable scaffold for the treatment of coronary artery disease. Method(s): To evaluate the acute device performance and long-term arterial response, serial intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) was performed at baseline (n = 31), 6 months (required, n = 31), and 2 years (optional, n = 16). Serial optical coherence tomography was recommended additionally with the aim of strut-level analysis. Result(s): Post-procedural device expansion (ratio of scaffold to reference lumen volume index on IVUS) of 99.4 +/- 14.7% was achieved. On optical coherence tomography, incomplete strut apposition was observed in a median of 1.3% (interquartile range: 0.0%, 3.1%) of all struts analyzed post-procedure, the majority of which had been resolved at 6 months (median: 0.0%; interquartile range: 0.0%, 0.2%) with nearly complete strut coverage (uncovered struts: median: 0.0%; interquartile range: 0.0%, 1.8%; n = 14). Neointimal volume obstruction by IVUS was 5.1 +/- 3.9% with minimal scaffold recoil (2.2 +/- 5.1%) at 6 months. Serial volumetric IVUS showed a plaque increase with a trend of adaptive remodeling over 6 months, followed by no significant change in vessel, plaque, or lumen from 6 months to 2 years (Figure). No thrombus or strut fracture including intraluminal dismantling was detected at any time point. [Formula presented] Conclusion(s): The data support clinical feasibility of thin-strut scaffolds without compromising radial strength and fracture resistance and with virtually stable arterial responses up to 2 years. Categories: CORONARY: Stents: Bioresorbable Vascular ScaffoldsCopyright © 2020
- Published
- 2020